.. of spelling, punctuatIon, diction, and localism is reproduced, IS to read her in a slightly different language. But that language is at last her own The senti- mental figure built up by editors from Higginson on (with the exception of Mrs. Bingham) fad s out, and we come upon a woman of timeless genius-a visionary as well as a matchless observer of realIty. The frequent childishness and the surface eccentricities seem un- important. WorkIng alone, without a vigorous culture to back her up, Emily Dickinson nevertheless became, with- in limits, a self-determined woman who made choices-rather than the pathet- ic recluse of the legend-and an artist who more often than not was right the first time. T wo brilliantly written new books by American women poets of a younger generation indicate how the American cultural background has broadened and deepened since Emily Dickinson's day. Emily Dickinson never completely escaped from her Romantic and late-Puritan inheritance; women poets today have a great variety of both technical means and material to draw upon. Adrienne Cecile Rich's "The Diamond Cutters" (Harper) is written in the most compressed and demanding form, but beneath the classic surface Miss Rich makes her points with meta- physical subtlety. Order and precision to her remain means, not ends, and her imaginative endowment and her depth of judgment are surprising in so young a writer. ElIzabeth Bishop's new vol- ume, "Poems" (Houghton Mifflin), :.' combines poems from her first book, ::. : :::o ::. ::: o "North and South" (1946), with a new group, "A Cold Spring." Miss Bishop can be a formalist when she wishes, but her prevailing impulse is away from technical decorum and to- .. ward a kind of controlled freedom. Her powers of description are astonishing; she distills every possIble essence from a scene. Her choice of subject is way- ., ward, but never fantastic in the arti- ficial sense, and she comes to many com- pelling conclusions. Both these young poets, conscious and instructed in their art as Emily Dickinson never was, have absorbed what they needed from the 1 past and are openly faced toward the , future. -LOUISE BOGAN H O V 'dated' s your dictionary? ø + ; '" 191 . {. ... .. t :j "t .t:: ", 1 :, , .. . \......:; : (10" '\. ^J'. .. ....""' ." ""'. y' , . , 0.::::::::=:.:=:-::'- :o..::::::::::::: :::::::::: :.:.:.:.:. ':0: :'::::::::::: : cll '\ ...z... ...: ', ' '^ . J' . " '"" .ÿ ).,' . ,.:., y .f1 # 7 --- . ..:',">W 1"$ ""'/'<' ø' ',.#=";' , ' f $9 $ t : 'I/ ""it '. t-...f1.J\,,' , :' .:.' <" $, 'n, 'ry' '1, ""'"" : y ,. / J . --,Ñ <, " .: ::' >...... ',' . ...,..,.. " ""' r ,;'1 . ....<^ ' " ' WEBSTER S NE"T WORLD DICTION....\.RY is the first truly new dictionary in more than three decades New from A to Z -142,000 entries each word freshly defined for modern usage. 1760 pages. In various bindings, from $5 00, at booksellers. THE WORLD PUBLISHING COMPANY, Cleveland and New York The story of a boy's extraordinary education in life and love from his talented, world-famous and 88!! ø ø B eW8::: :::::::::::::::::.:.:;:::::;.:::::;::::::: o A novel by ANTHON": WEST $8.75 at all bookstores · i Random House, N. Y. · - unmarried parents J II J U88 : : ::::::O::.:::::.'::: ',:::::0::;:0;::::: .:::::::::::::::0::::::, 0 .:::::::::::::: II Literary discovery "One of the most original and perfect works of imagination. u -Edwin A1uir Tom Barber FORREST REID S bewitching story of a boyhood in Ireland. The three Tom Barber novels, complete in one volume: Young Tom The Re- treat, and Uncle Stepheno Intro. by E. M. Forster $5. PANTHEON ßRJ[FL Y NOTE,O FICTION P ARTISANS, by Peter Matthiessen (Vi- king). Barney Sand, a twenty-nine- year-old American newspaperman working in Paris, sets out to get an . lor $lIþørlJ rølltllll, IIIJOlit i , v.''' ' ''- I I BULLFIGHTING '. .,, , SPAIN " t '\, .J },.,.. ' #f $/ l....:.....,,' ,ø:' \'/;:' ,,(,:.: ", D RAMA . )j<', . " J '\. ') " · \ 1011'/1 Wllilt KENNETH TYNAN'S , . : 1'.. 4%, " '" Bull Fever With 61 spectacular photographs $5 00 HARPER .